Jill Kinmont Boothe also died this week

lucyanna girl

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For those who do not know, she was an American skier in the 1950s who broke her neck in a sking accident. Ms Boothe was only 18 years old at the time of her accident. Her life story was made into a movie, "The Other Side of the Mountain". She spent the rest of her life as a teacher, artist, and wife who did not let being in a wheel chair slow her down and touched the lives of many people in her community.

If you do not know this story you should look it up.

I find it sad that so many people are talking about Whitney Houston and so few know about people like Jill K Boothe. Whitney Houston was blessed with a wonderful talent but let her lifestyle take away her gift.

Penny

http://search.yahoo.com/r/_ylt=A0oG...-jill-kinmont-boothe-20120211,0,6377665.story



Jill Kinmont Boothe was the national women's slalom champion and on the cover of Sports Illustrated when she set out to win a 1955 race that would help put her on the U.S. Olympic ski team. As she sped down a Utah mountain slope, she lost control on an icy bump, struck a spectator, crashed and tumbled into a tree.

When she finally came to a stop, she couldn't feel anything. This must be death, she later recalled thinking. Her neck broken, she was paralyzed below her shoulders, her promising career as a skier over at 18.

But Kinmont Boothe became a role model of a different sort, the subject of a book and two Hollywood films, a teacher and a painter who refused to let her crippling injuries turn her into a different person.

She died Thursday at a hospital in Carson City, Nev., said Ruth Rhines of the local coroner's office. Rhines could not confirm reports that Kinmont Boothe died of complications related to surgery. She was 75.

A Los Angeles native, she was born Feb. 16, 1936, and in her early teens moved with her family to the Owens Valley, where her father ran a dude ranch in Bishop in the shadow of the Eastern Sierra. She learned to ski at nearby Mammoth Mountain and in 1954 won both the national junior and senior slalom championships

Adding to her appeal, she was, in the words of 1950s press accounts, a "plucky, pretty" blue-eyed blond — the mid-century ideal of young womanhood.

"Everybody that I knew at that age thought Jill was about the cutest thing around; she really was a beautiful young lady and a phenomenal skier," said Alan Engen, a former U.S. ski competitor and ski historian who met Kinmont Boothe as a young racer. "At the time that she had her accident, she was probably the premier up-and-comer women's U.S. skier."

Her crash before several thousand spectators at the Snow Cup giant slalom race in Alta, Utah, made headlines. When she returned to Southern California on a stretcher after two months in a Salt Lake City hospital, crowds of reporters and cameramen greeted her at the train station.

Despite a broken neck, she told them she hoped to walk and even ski again. She had the use of neck and shoulder muscles and learned to write, type and paint with the aid of a hand brace. But she spent the rest of her life in a wheelchair.

After graduating from UCLA with a degree in German and English, she applied to the university's school of education and was rejected because of her disability, she later said. Undaunted, she moved north with her parents, earned a teaching certificate at the University of Washington and taught remedial reading in elementary schools on Mercer Island.

When she and her mother returned to Los Angeles after her father died in 1967, one Southern California school district after another refused to hire her.

In 1968, Kinmont Boothe told The Times that a Los Angeles school district physician kept saying: " 'What a tragedy. A young girl, cut down in the bloom of youth.' All that. It sounded like a Western or something."

"I told her, 'That's nothing. The only tragedy is if you won't hire me because of this injury.' "

The district didn't give her a job. But the Beverly Hills school system did and Kinmont Boothe taught remedial reading there for a number of years.

"To get mad, to scream and holler, to tell the world — that doesn't get you anywhere," she said in the Times article, published when the newspaper named her a Woman of the Year for 1967. "You sort of look for what's good that's left, I guess."

By that time, she had endured a number of personal losses. Her teenage boyfriend was killed in an avalanche. A second love died when his small plane crashed in Donner Lake. A UCLA friend who mentored her succumbed to an undiagnosed disease.

Kinmont Boothe and her mother moved back to Bishop in the 1970s, when she met truck driver John Boothe and married him. Her husband survives her.

"I think the thing that impressed me most the first time I met her was that after a few minutes you forgot all about her being in a wheelchair," Boothe told The Times last year. "She obviously isn't preoccupied by it and pretty soon you're not either."

Her life and losses were the subject of a 1966 book, "A Long Way Up: The Story of Jill Kinmont," by E.G. Valens, and two films, "The Other Side of the Mountain" in 1975 and a 1978 sequel, both of which were panned in the media. Sports Illustrated described the first movie as "insufferably fulsome," and a Times critic called the second a "synthetic tear jerker."

In Bishop, Kinmont Boothe continued to teach, instructing learning and physically disabled children in the last years of her career. A school in town is named after her.

"My life has really been very full," Kinmont Boothe said last year. "I've had lots of wonderful experiences."
 
I remember watching those movies. For some reason I thought she died a long time ago. Unfortunately not too many people would know that name..or even the movies most likely if they weren't already late teens or older when the movies came out. Even with seeing the movies and knowing the story I didn't put the two of them together right away.
 
I knew that name the minute I saw this thread. I read that book in jr. high. It's too bad her death was overshadowed.
Daisyx3
 
For those who do not know, she was an American skier in the 1950s who broke her neck in a sking accident. Ms Boothe was only 18 years old at the time of her accident. Her life story was made into a movie, "The Other Side of the Mountain". She spent the rest of her life as a teacher, artist, and wife who did not let being in a wheel chair slow her down and touched the lives of many people in her community.

If you do not know this story you should look it up.

I find it sad that so many people are talking about Whitney Houston and so few know about people like Jill K Boothe. Whitney Houston was blessed with a wonderful talent but let her lifestyle take away her gift.

Penny

http://search.yahoo.com/r/_ylt=A0oG...-jill-kinmont-boothe-20120211,0,6377665.story



Jill Kinmont Boothe was the national women's slalom champion and on the cover of Sports Illustrated when she set out to win a 1955 race that would help put her on the U.S. Olympic ski team. As she sped down a Utah mountain slope, she lost control on an icy bump, struck a spectator, crashed and tumbled into a tree.

When she finally came to a stop, she couldn't feel anything. This must be death, she later recalled thinking. Her neck broken, she was paralyzed below her shoulders, her promising career as a skier over at 18.

But Kinmont Boothe became a role model of a different sort, the subject of a book and two Hollywood films, a teacher and a painter who refused to let her crippling injuries turn her into a different person.

She died Thursday at a hospital in Carson City, Nev., said Ruth Rhines of the local coroner's office. Rhines could not confirm reports that Kinmont Boothe died of complications related to surgery. She was 75.

A Los Angeles native, she was born Feb. 16, 1936, and in her early teens moved with her family to the Owens Valley, where her father ran a dude ranch in Bishop in the shadow of the Eastern Sierra. She learned to ski at nearby Mammoth Mountain and in 1954 won both the national junior and senior slalom championships

Adding to her appeal, she was, in the words of 1950s press accounts, a "plucky, pretty" blue-eyed blond — the mid-century ideal of young womanhood.

"Everybody that I knew at that age thought Jill was about the cutest thing around; she really was a beautiful young lady and a phenomenal skier," said Alan Engen, a former U.S. ski competitor and ski historian who met Kinmont Boothe as a young racer. "At the time that she had her accident, she was probably the premier up-and-comer women's U.S. skier."

Her crash before several thousand spectators at the Snow Cup giant slalom race in Alta, Utah, made headlines. When she returned to Southern California on a stretcher after two months in a Salt Lake City hospital, crowds of reporters and cameramen greeted her at the train station.

Despite a broken neck, she told them she hoped to walk and even ski again. She had the use of neck and shoulder muscles and learned to write, type and paint with the aid of a hand brace. But she spent the rest of her life in a wheelchair.

After graduating from UCLA with a degree in German and English, she applied to the university's school of education and was rejected because of her disability, she later said. Undaunted, she moved north with her parents, earned a teaching certificate at the University of Washington and taught remedial reading in elementary schools on Mercer Island.

When she and her mother returned to Los Angeles after her father died in 1967, one Southern California school district after another refused to hire her.

In 1968, Kinmont Boothe told The Times that a Los Angeles school district physician kept saying: " 'What a tragedy. A young girl, cut down in the bloom of youth.' All that. It sounded like a Western or something."

"I told her, 'That's nothing. The only tragedy is if you won't hire me because of this injury.' "

The district didn't give her a job. But the Beverly Hills school system did and Kinmont Boothe taught remedial reading there for a number of years.

"To get mad, to scream and holler, to tell the world — that doesn't get you anywhere," she said in the Times article, published when the newspaper named her a Woman of the Year for 1967. "You sort of look for what's good that's left, I guess."

By that time, she had endured a number of personal losses. Her teenage boyfriend was killed in an avalanche. A second love died when his small plane crashed in Donner Lake. A UCLA friend who mentored her succumbed to an undiagnosed disease.

Kinmont Boothe and her mother moved back to Bishop in the 1970s, when she met truck driver John Boothe and married him. Her husband survives her.

"I think the thing that impressed me most the first time I met her was that after a few minutes you forgot all about her being in a wheelchair," Boothe told The Times last year. "She obviously isn't preoccupied by it and pretty soon you're not either."

Her life and losses were the subject of a 1966 book, "A Long Way Up: The Story of Jill Kinmont," by E.G. Valens, and two films, "The Other Side of the Mountain" in 1975 and a 1978 sequel, both of which were panned in the media. Sports Illustrated described the first movie as "insufferably fulsome," and a Times critic called the second a "synthetic tear jerker."

In Bishop, Kinmont Boothe continued to teach, instructing learning and physically disabled children in the last years of her career. A school in town is named after her.

"My life has really been very full," Kinmont Boothe said last year. "I've had lots of wonderful experiences."

Thank you for posting this story, Jill Boothe was a true lady and a great role model.
 
I remember her. Thanks for posting the news. I didn't know that she had died.

RIP.
 
I, too, knew who she was the second I read the thread topic. I read the book and saw the movies, and have sometimes wondered what happened to her in the rest of her life. Thanks for posting this... and RIP, Jill.
 
I just recently re-read her book and had looked up what she was doing currently. She was quite an inspiration and will be greatly missed!
 
Her movie was one of the first "grown up" movies that I saw. I was in 5th grade at the time.:goodvibes
 
I too read the books and saw the movies while in Middle and High schools. Then, in 1981 I met her.

I was traveling with Up With People and we performed in Bishop CA. She and her husband John hosted several of our international students ( their request ) and then had the entire cast ( 150 ) of us over to their house for dinner.

They were such a down to earth couple and very gracious hosts. They came to both of our performances in Bishop and were very enthusiastic about the whole Up With People program. I remember Jill telling us that she wished that she could have had more of an opportunity to travel, and especially travel with such an organization like Up With People.

Linda
 
I remember that movie and book about her. I didn't know she had passed away.
 
So sorry to hear of her passing. She was an inspirational person who didn't let her tragic accident stand in her way of living a full and productive life.
 
Sorry to hear of her death. I remember her, read the book, loved the movie.

Inspirational life.
 












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